Still think it’s a tale of two economies. The top 20% or so are doing very well, house prices are up, stock prices are up, inflation doesn’t affect them as much because it’s such a small percentage of their spending. The bottom 40% are flat out struggling or worse. That middle 40% are a case by case basis depending on job, debt load, whether you own your home etc.
For sure but I think those percentages are way off. The top 20% have always done well. The top 20% can't smash through new records for travel, concerts, ballpark tickets, restaurant spend, iphones, and basically every other non-essential item in existence. That requires the combined work of the entire populace.
Yes it blows for the bottom 20%, no doubt. But this is America and that's always the case, it's the system. Though I do still contend that we've all (including the bottom percentile) become accustomed to having more to the point where we spend on non-essential luxuries that people in the same socio-economic class of prior generations would have never even considered.
People under 25 spent over 40% as much on travel as boomers last year, which is an insanely high amount of spend for people that haven't even come close to entering their prime earning years yet. Anecdotally my sister in law is a single mom, kindergarten teacher that has seen Taylor Swift 4 times in the last few years, one of them in Rio as part of a big international trip. I honestly have no idea how she can afford that, but she's gonna spend on it anyway.
She can’t afford it. She put it on a credit card. But, who cares? Right?
At what point do these credit card companies fold when their customers default? I don’t know. They’re pretty flush.
But, it’s coming, eventually.
What's coming? Credit card companies going out of business? Really? No. Wrong, hard no. They are fine. They LOVE this environment. They never fold, they just get bought out. We're you even alive in 2000? Do you not remember Providian?
No, I don't think so. The following is the largest credit card companies in the US ranked by purchase volume. These 8 have about 3/4 of the credit card market share. No other issuer has more than 3% market share.
- Chase
- American Express
- Citi
- Capital One
- Bank of America
- Discover
- U.S. Bank
- Wells Fargo
Notice that 6 of the 8 are also some of the largest banks in the country. It would take an economic event worse than the 2008 RE crash to topple these. If they did fail, there is a choice of two options: 1) Do what government and regulators swear would not happen and save them because they are too big to fail or 2) Actually break up, wind down and spin off a saved institution. Of which would be a huge undertaking for just one of these companies, let alone during a crisis event where more than one would have failed or be failing. What I am saying in this is that first, most of these are nothing like Providian. Second, there economic downturn would have to be significant for these to fail due to their required reserves. Third, even if that actually happened, the government is likely to bail them out or perhaps take ownership and then break it all down.
As for Providian, Providian did not fail. It sold to WaMu. Of course, the reason of the sale was a weakened company with financial distress. Now to head off any arguments that that acquisition lead to WaMu's demise, that would be completely unfounded and false. WaMu failed due to a good old fashioned run on the bank. It lost more than 10% of it's deposit base with the span of a week. Let me be very clear about this. EVERY SINGLE BANK THAT HAS EVER BEEN OR IS OR WILL BE, would fail in the same way facing that same circumstances unless rescued by the government. The reason for the run was a lost of confidence due to the failure of IndyMac which lead to large scale media speculation of 'who is next' of which since IndyMac was a large lender of Option ARMs the speculation landed on the other lenders that did large volumes of Option ARMs- namely, WaMu and World Savings with Countrywide having sold about a month or so before IndyMac failed and BofA was seen as impervious due to it's size and being 'too large to fail'. Further eroding confidence was one particular Senator trying to grandstand and ended up pouring gas on the fire as well as, at least I believe, executives at Chase that helped spread and push rumors of WaMu failing in order to continue to pursue their acquisition of WaMu (before WaMu failed, Chase made an offer to buy WaMu which was rejected as it was quite a bit under the current stock price at the time.) WaMu did not fail due to credit card portfolio (which actually was performing quite well) or even Option ARMs but just the run like you see in It's A Wonderful Life but in this story.... they ran out of cash and time.
That all being said, the amount of credit card debt is at an all time high. One way that many Americans have got themselves out of a mess of high credit card debt has been doing a cash out refinance on their homes. Many Americans have the equity but they are less inclined to refinance due to a severely low interest rate. I talked to one client last week that has about $30K in high interest credit card debt and also a 2.75% mortgage. Due to their credit scores being so low, they were referred to me by a bank MLO to help. I then found out that they also had a recent 30 day late on their mortgage which severely complicated things. I was able to find a solution but in my own words 'it was ugly'. It would have cost them about $10K just to do the refinance and then the rate would have been about 10%. Even with it being that ugly, I calculated that their break even point with the much higher mortgage rate AND the high costs of the refinance was short of two years AND that was with my using a very conservative 20% interest rate among all their debt which I know their actual rates are higher than. (if you were wondering, the plan was to refi them, clear the debt, their credit scores would jump up significantly and then after 6 months had passed from their 30 day late, do another FHA refinance to get them a much better rate- they declined this option... I do think to their detriment but I understand the psychological challenge of accepting losing a 2.75% mortgage and spending $10K to get out of credit card debt. They said they would try to pay down their debt, unless they somehow greatly decrease their expenses and/or increase their income, they will not make much of a dent. I can still refi them in 6 months but their credit score will still be much lower and they will have a higher mortgage rate than they would have if they followed my plan.